Itoa

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Itoa
Itoa orientalis in Chengdu Botanical Garden, China
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Salicaceae
Subfamily: Salicoideae
Tribe: Saliceae
Genus: Itoa
Hemsl.
Species

See text

Synonyms

Mesaulosperma Slooten

Itoa is a genus of flowering plants in the family Salicaceae.[1] It is also in the tribe Saliceae.[2]

Its native range is southern China to Vietnam, central and eastern Malesia to New Guinea. It is found in China (Hainan), Maluku Islands, New Guinea, Sulawesi and Vietnam.[1]

Description[edit]

An evergreen tree with broad leaves,[3][4] that are alternate, sometimes sub-opposite placed.[5] The leaf blade is pinnate-veined with lateral veins closely set, mostly 1-2 cm apart.[5] The yellow buff flowers,[4] are unisexual, hypogynous (borne below the ovary), The staminate flowers (male flower, flower with stamens but no pistil) are in erect, terminal panicles. The pistillate flowers (a flower containing one or more pistils but no stamens, female flower) has 1 to few in short terminal or axillary racemes. It has bracts and the bracteoles (small bracts) are a pair per pedicel, usually caducous (falling off early). The sepals appearing 3 or 4-merous in bud, in fact to 5-merous at anthesis (at time of flowering), nearly free, valvate, ovate shaped, with base appearing to be cordate (heart-shaped). The staminate flowers have many stamens with filaments free and filiform (thread-like). The anthers are ellipsoid to oblong in shape, basifixed, connective usually curved, bringing both locules (chambers) to face in same direction (towards the periphery of flower). The pistillate flowers have ovary superior, 1-loculed; placentas are 6-8, rarely 5, filiform and have a woody-like end. The ovules are numerous with 6-8 styles, which are very short, connate (cone-like), forming a short longitudinally ribbed column. The stigmatic branches (4-) 6-8 are spreading or strongly reflexed against the ovary and irregularly palmately lobed. The many staminodes (sterile stamen) are extragynoecial, like the stamens but very much reduced. The seed capsule is ovoid or ellipsoid in shape, large, woody, tomentose (covered in hairs), outer layer probably finally dehiscent. The valves (5 or) 6-8, are fusiform (rod shaped), splitting from apex and base and remaining attached by woody persistent placental strips. The styles are caducous. It has many seeds, which are arranged vertically in the capsule,[5] they are winged with a broad wing,[6] which is flat, thin, triangular, squarish or rectangular, completely surrounding seed.[5]

Taxonomy[edit]

The genus name of Itoa is in honour of Keisuke Itō (1803–1901) a Japanese physician and biologist, and his grandson Tokutarō Itō (1868–1941),[7] and it was first described and published in Hooker's Icon. Pl. Vol.27 on table 2688 in 1901.[1]

Known species[edit]

According to Kew;[1]

Itoa orientalis Hemsl. is grown as an ornamental tree in Australia,[4] Cornwall, UK,[8] and Ireland.[3]

Itoa stapfii (Koord.) Sleumer is found in Papua New Guinea.[5][9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Itoa Hemsl. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  2. ^ Boucher, Lisa D.; Manchester, Steven R.; Judd, Walter S. (September 2003). "An extinct genus of Salicaceae based on twigs with attached flowers, fruits, and foliage from the Eocene Green River Formation of Utah and Colorado, USA". American Journal of Botany. 90 (9): 1389–1399.
  3. ^ a b Royal Horticultural Society The Garden, Volume 126, Pages 743-955, 2001, p. 868, at Google Books
  4. ^ a b c "Itoa orientalis". Far Reaches Farm. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Itoa in Flora of China @ efloras.org". www.efloras.org. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  6. ^ M. M. J. van Balgooy Malesian Seed Plants: Portraits of tree families, (Rijksherbarium/Hortus Botanicus, 1997), p. 125, at Google Books
  7. ^ Quattrocchi, Umberto (2000). CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names, Volume II, D–L. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8493-2676-9.
  8. ^ Peter Clough and Philip McMillan Browse Gardening on the Edge: Drawing on the Cornwall Experience (2004), p. 43, at Google Books
  9. ^ Barry J Conn and Kipiro Q Damas Trees of Papua New Guinea: Volume 1: Introduction and Gnetales to Fabales (2019), p. 52, at Google Books

Data related to Itoa at Wikispecies